I . .... ... 0 T , THE BEE: OMAHA.. SUNDAY, JUNK 12. 1921. June Graduating Class of South High School . J 1. Mildred Means. . l.uillj niiea. T. SI a 1." Kin sr. 4. . LI Miner. t. Paulino Moron. I. Ci. lirvoika. 11. Carl Holmberg. K. Sadye Levey. '.. Ruth Olllet. 12. Elsie Chlzek. IT. Fred Bachman. S. Bertha C.irthoffer. 13. Clark Nelman. 1S Vera Olson. 9. Leah Rokor. K. Helen Corcoran. 19. Albert Grother. 10. Louis Brandstad. 15. a. Broadwell. CO. C. Tucker. (. The Three Dead Men (Continued From Tuge One.) ona gal in Georgetown now, an she hab no friends but Solly, an' she terrible fond ob him." "He treated her well?" "Berry kind an' good to her. She tell yo' de same If yo' ask her." Farther Inquiries respecting the character and hi3tory of John Digsle and Solly Lawson conflrnied these reports of wife and mother. In . dependent witnesses agreed with them and with An-os Slanningr, who had already told me the 1a Jkimo storv. It was Indeed, a curious coincidences ' '-""fT. . ., 1, . J l.-.l H 1 ..1. r liiai ino inrco uc;iu men iiiu an uu wiluuul Hiiy sinister in titii5vi uuaiy unouu.i miami. Of tho young lialf-casto, though it was clear he had beeiv lawless and more or less disreputable, - it seemed unlikely that he could have wakened Bufiicient enmity to lose his life for his sins. To explain why Henry Slannins had gone out in the night challenged me as the pregnant point; and given the reason for that most un usual ftcp, everything: else might have followed from it: but no reason offered; at every turn in this exasperating inquiry I was headed off by a blank wall, as if seemed, for purpose and . motive, though they must have existed absolute- ' ' ly beyond my power to discover. I Henry Slanning had clearly gone where he V knew John Diggle was to- be found on his rounds; but whether he bad actually sought Diggle, or another, could never be known, unless a living ' , man furnished the information. None, how ever, came forward; there was a extraordinary lack of all evidence; for in such cases, nine times out of ten, chance offers a foothold for a first step, and this or that man or women, from out side the case, Vili appear with some incident or observation that may open the way to inquiry or suggest a train of research. But no such thing happened for me. Not a soul bore any testimony of any sort whatever, and not a soul actually came within the radius of the case. Here, apparency, one stood confronted with three barefaced and deliberate murders, com mitted in a night on a small island, yet not a shadow of any motive explained them and not a living being could fairly be pointed at as sus- L- pect in any degree. I made very copious notes and, of course, pursued inquiry through many minor channels, N which all endochin failuro and contributed no light. I stood in the disagreeable position of being unable to make a case, and after a month's very hard and conscientious work was forced to own it to myself. A loss of self-esteem resulted. I began all over again, only to com- . Sete another circle of failure. Nor could it be called comparative unsuccess. The futility of my investigation was complete. I arrived at no theory of any sort or kind, and though once Ij glimpsed the truth darkly, aa afterwards ap peared, I wandered from the right road the moment it began to appear impossible. f My last week at Barbados, the last of six spent upi the subject, was devoted largely to Amo3 Slannlng. He had been extraordinarily kind to me personally, and insisted upon my - spending a" few days at the Felican estate as his guest before I left tho West Indies. He was frankly disappointed at my failure, but not more than I confessed myself to being. It is true that, though trained to this work by in- V stinctand native bent, with already some fair share of success in various cases, I failed sig nally here. I could only admit and hope my chief might, prove more fortunate. We talked much of Henry Slanning; indeed, I kept the conversa t tion to him as far as one decently might, and f i only w ith his twin brother; for I now saw the truth of what men had told me that Amos en tertained an opinion of his brother's character that differed from the truth. He did not under value his rectitude, or the regard and respect universally extended to the dead man; but he had never fathomed a character very different from his own, and probably never felt, even if hehd seen, tho intellectual and inquisitive side of Henry Slanning's character. For example, when I returned to the pos sibility of suicide, a thought 'that haunted me in connection with the case, though the facts ' were there to prove murder, Amos Slanning as $jl sured me that nothing was more unlikely, and V even vhen the revolver was proved to have been bought in England by his brother, he ' j Ftoutly protested that it could not have been purchased with any thought of such a purpose. Other, however, saw no improbability in the idra o? Henry Slanning's suicide under certain circumstances; but, since obvious murder and not suicide confronted us, they saw no object In raising the Question. s I begged for a photograph of the dead man to take home with the rest of my elaborate The uiaturi fc lent me resembled SI. K. Madsen. 2S. Leo Fried. 17. S3. Ruth Dale ;8. 24. F.dwin Swanson. 9. 15. Edward Harlan. SO. Amos closely in feature, but the expression was different subtler and more melan8holy. In deed, it was a face where unrest had niade a home. End one had judged the man who looked so was defeated of his ambitions. Tet no cyni cism clouded his features and his mouth was as kindly as his brother's and no firmer. The photo?iaph had been taken before Slanning's love affair. What proved more interesting to me came into my hands by accident two days before I left the island on my homeward way. Amos, searching among his brother's things, had found a diary, which contained nothing that threw illumination upon the past and apparently abstained of set purpose from any mention of Henry's romance; but, in addition to this, he discovered a pile of manuscript the musings Sot an intellectual man on a variety of subjects, all of direct human interest. Study of Henry Slanning's personal library had already convinced me of his activity in the domain of thought, while Lady Warrender had .confirmed the fact. His books were for the most part philosophical, and I found a trans lation of Gomperz that had evidently occupied much ct his time, and translations of other Ger man writers, including the English version in 20 volumes of Nietzsche. He had Gilbert Mur ray's Greek tragedians, also, with Plato and Aristotle deeply read. His interest evidently ran on the great pagans.' As to his own writ ings, they reminded one of the "Anatomy of Melancholy." They abounded in curious quo tations and tended to the morbid; but they were full of illumination as to the character of the man revealed in his interests. He had compiled on love, passion, ambi tion, patience, duty, suicide, justice, free thought and free will as opposed to destiny. He was clftarly a rationalist at this stage of his life, and acknowledged no supernatural inhi bition to conduct; but his sense of duty was ex quisitely keen; he debated questions of justice with a mind as impartial as distinguished, and one felt in tho presence of a man who was al most weighed down by his obligations to his fellow creatures. He wrote of mastery and domination, of craft and the unhappy need for falsehood in the affairs of life, of heredity and environment as rival or twin forces in develop ment of character. I begged these voluminous documents, since, in my (.pinion, they must prove of great value to "buveen when he came to investigate Henry Slann'ng's fate; and his brother was content that I should tako them with me. "I shall publsh the whole thing presently" .he assured me. "It wll be a valuable memorial of Henry and help to show the world that he was a remarkable man and a greater thinker than people supposed." And so I left the West Indies (picking up the steamship Don on its return voyage from Jamaica), and departed grateful for much kind ness and consideration, the richer for a good friend or two men who are still my friends and disappointed and chagrined to the very root3 of my being in this blank failure to ad vance by. a single fruitful speculation the prob lcma I had gone so many miles and worked so exceedingly hard to resolve. My utter failure had one good result, for it awoke the interest of Michael Duveen and he did not conceal his astonishment at a fiasco so complete. "A dozen theories, of course, I had," I ex plained, "but each in turn came up against a blank negation. I could find no sort of explana tion that fitted all the facts worse, I could find no explanation that fitted an of them. So far as I could discover, as a result of sleepless search, these three men had not between them a real enemy in the world, nor was it possible to meet anybody living, or hear of anybody living, who can gain anything by the death of any of them". You'll say, of course, that Amos Slanning gains; but in reality he does not, for he and Henry had practcally everything in com mon and were very deeply attached to each other. ' . ' "If one thing is certain, where all is so un certain, I should say it was the absolute in nocence of Amos Slanning. The weirdest thing is, that against the evidence of my own sense and the fact of murder duly proved murder, of course, by a person unknown I still find my mind coming back and back to tho convic tion that it simply cannot be. There was no body on earth to rnurder Slanning; but there was quite sufficient reason for him to commit suicide. But he didn't." Duveen patted me on the shoulder. "We shall see whether you are to be for given," he said. "Tou have at least roused my curiosity and I shall better judge when I set to work on your notes, it you have failed as hope lessly as you imagine. Meanwhile there is plenty to do. Come and dine with me a week hence, if nothing happens to prevent you; then you shall bear your sentence, or your acquittal, as Glltner Hill. K. Thompson. Frank Ourada. Dolores Partsch. Gail Hamilton. 31. Mildred Okerberg. "S. .Tanet Brum. . Edwin Glaesel. ?". Elsie Chlzek. 31. .1. T. Curran. 8. Albina Kostal. "4. Lucille Hayhurst.E9. F.. Langhelne. Irving Foley. 40. Clyde Gelter. the case may be. The change has done you good save for yr'ir remorseful expression. I never saw you looking so well." Thus he dismissed me and I felt glad to think of other things until the evening came on which I was to dine with him. He put me off for a farther week, however, but saw me at his office and asked a few questions concerning the Wekt Indian problem. These I answered, and ho made no comment on my replies. Then I dined with him and, after the meal, he read me the following report: "I have. solved the problem," he said, "and I am absolutely convinced in my own mind that it is correctly solved. Whether those most vital ly interested, however, will accept the solution, is another question." "Solved it?" I gasped.' "To my own satisfaction," he repeated; "and I shall lie disappointed if not to yours also. Tou are not to blame. You did everything that I should, or could, have done myself. Y'ou lacked the necessary synthetic inspiration to put the pieces of the puzzle together after col lecting them that is all." "That is everything." . "You were right, but let appearances tempt you away from the truth. Your intuition had only to be followed, but, basely, you deserted it." "How could I follow it against an absolute fact?" "My dear friend, no fact is a'bsolute." r "But murder can't be suicide." "Murder may be suicide and suicide may be murder. Don't make rash assertions; but light your cigar and listen. I'm rather pleased with this; though I repeat it is quite likely that no body but our noble selves will appreciate It at its true, value. From your description of Amos Planning I am quite sure that he will not. Therefore, let us expect no reward." Then he read me his solution of the mystery. "Only through a close and exhaustive study of character is it possible to reach any explana tion of this problem; and in the case of Mr. Henry Slanning, on whose death the destruction of the lesser men, John Diggle and Solly Law son, will be found to depend, ample material for an estimate of his complex temperament exists. Not only from the facts recorded con cerning him, but also from his own disserta tions and meditations he may be measured; and it is from my estimate of him, built on elaborate data, that I propound tho following theory and reconstruct ' the incidents which deprived him and the ether two victims of their lives. "Emphatically Solly Lawson's end forms a part of the larger problem, for I find in him a very vital component of the whole. Accident involved him in the heart of the catastrophe, and, without him, we should have had one dead man Instead of three and a tragedy of an interesting- psychological nature, but no mystery whatever. For the mystery now to be ex plained, is not the premeditated work of man, but the blind operation of chance. "Let us then glance first at character, and take tho dead in rotation. As I shall show, we are concerned alone with them. No undiscov ered villains in hiding; no living man, unless it be myself, yet understands the secret. These three alone are responsible for their own un doing; or it would be mora correct to say that an egregious action of Henry Slanning precipi tated the death of the two humbler personages. "Henry Slanning we find to be a man of cultured and refined tastes, averse from even the incidental violence of sport. Mrs. .Jane Diggle said of him that 'he could not kill a scorpion.' He was shrewd, sagacious, and a good man of business. The power of wealth ho inherited and did not abuse. He worked hard and with an exemplary humanity and considera tion for air he employed. He was generous, thoughtful and kind hearted; nor did he lack for ambition beyond his own prosperity and the well-being of his many employes, for we find him accepting civil offices in Barbados and de voting no small measure of his time to unpaid labor for the general weal. "This is the other man and the personality familiar to his brother, his friends and ac quaintances; but there is another Henry Slan ning. an 'intellectual of inquiring spirit, a cease less searcher after curious knowledge, a volum inous reader, and a keen thinker along certain lines. Ho is interested in many things, but cer tain subjects possess for him a peculiar fascina tion, and one above all others would seem per sistently to intrigue his mind. "It is a morbid subject hardly to be asso ciated with a prosperous, hale, and popular young man of 33; but there can be no doubt of the fact, since not only was it reported to my colleague from more than one quarter in the course of his independent inquiry, but we also find I'. an ever present theme of Henry Slan ninr's careful memoranda. He commits himself to a definite opinion upon it; he ra- '.cks pro fane literature; for his support and Justin 41. John Rcjsdorf. 43. Pearl Pearson. 43. Alva Chambers. 44. J. Shainholtz. 45. Marie Gorman. 4. W. Hihbeler. f 1. Harry Murdock. 47. Hugh Hodgen. 62. Louise GJertson. 48. Barbara Flcenec. 6 1. .T. Doksansky. '9. Josepl Fetr. ti Fred M'Carron. 10. D. Flolcher. f'5. E. Mansell. flcation for hi3 conclusion in Christian history. "To this we will return. For the' moment it is necessary to show how what possessed, in the first place, no more than an abstract and aca demic interest for Henry Slanning, rose to be come a personal problem and a personal temp tation. He had tasted what life could offer and had, apparently, reached to the summit of his own ambitions, when there came into his life a new and tremendous experience. He fell in love for the first time. His brother, who was never absent from him, assures that he had not before declared or revealed any affection for -a woman, and though we have no absolute proof of this, since in the case of his known attach ment, Mr. Amos Slanning was entirely ignorant of It until after his death though, therefore, we cannot say with conviction that Henry never loved before, it is-easonable to assume that no mastc: -passion overwhelmed him until he found himself in love with Miss May Warrender. "It is certain that he was deeply attached to her, though his reserved and sensitive na ture concealed the fact from all but the young l?dy herself. He paid his devotions with such delicacy, such humility, and such refinement as might be expected from such a man; and we may assume he was sanguine, for his Jife had moved easily and successfully. He had much to offer and the object of his affections, as we know, was inexperienced and declares that for a long time she did not appreciate the signifi cance of his friendship. Few girls, who did not yet know the. meaning of love, would have re fused him; and she had in all innocence wel comed his advances, so that we may assume he felt little doubt of acceptance. "I labor thus in order to dwell on the ex tent of Mr. Slanning's disappointment when he heard that his hope was vain; and I believe that so violent and complete was the shock of the news, that a man who never appears to have loved life for itself, was thrown into a very furnace of disillusionment and for the time be ing, at least, found existence a tyranny no long er to be endured. With his rare mental en- tlowments it is reasonable to suppose that, given time, he would have survived his terrible ex perience and recovered from his disappoint ment in the maner of a normal man; but he permitted himself no time. He turned to the subject of his philosophic meditations and re search, and under this hard blow of fate a fate that hau always used him kindly until the pres ent he found' in that themp no longer a pre occupation for thought, but an invitation to ac tion. "That theme, the ever recurring obession of his mental activity, was suicide. And the fact appears in his own handwriting a thousand times. Again and again he opens on some other subject, yet, like a phantom in the noonday of intelligent considerations upon love, hope, faith, honor, duty and other subjects worthy of a high-minded and altruistic spirit, there creeps into tho argument self-destruuction. He cannot evade it; there is for him a fascination in the topic that brings him back again and again. It vitiates his thinking; it is a blood-red thread woven through the fabric of his thoughts. He exhausts literature in his search for every high examj.le and significant reference to self-destruction. "He held with the great pagans that to live in want, dishonor or suffering was folly. Ho echoed Cato, Pomponius, Atticus, Epicurus. We find him quoting Seneca: 'Malum est in neces sitate vivere; necessitas nulla est:' that it i3 miserable to live in need, but there is no need so to do. He agroes with Marcus Aurclius, that if the cabin smokes, a wise man takes leave of it. Ho says with Quintilian: 'Nemo nisi sua culpa diu dolet' no man endures suffering save through his own fault. But he is not content to justify the practice of suicide from the pagan alone; it is not enough that the Medea and Persians, the Greeks and Romans are with him and that all nations of antiquity furnish admlrabie and laudable examples of what in Christian eyes is generally regarded as a sin. He seeks instances through the sacred Jewish writings and finds in the Apocrypha an au thentic instance, when Razis, one of the elders of Jerusalem, slays himself (in II. Maccabees) and is applauded by the historian for so doing. We find him also concerned with lights of the Christian church l'elagia and Sophronia, can onized lor their saintly self-destruction; and of men, especially Jacques du Chastel, that bishop of Soissons who charged an army single-handed and gloriously committed felo-de-se for his faith. "Then, having concluded with Cicero, that it is agreeable to nature in a wise man' to take leave of life at its height of prosperity, ho writes a learned essay on a saying from Josephu, that he who dies sooner or lives longer than he ought, is equally a coward. So he goes 'about it and about,' but cannot leave the question for any time, but it draws him forcibly again. "With respect to Henry Slanning, then, I ftffirffl itel ilia fiiarEfiMfflinj is, lays, 6. M. Kjargoard. M. K. Prucha. 57. Gertrude O'Shea. f 2. .f. M. Curran. 6S. Esther Hansen. Rose Dolezal. 69. Florence Oworak.'i4. C. Fitzgerald. 60. Dorothy Smith. to. Dwich: Frltts. .. Florence Titter. P7, Georgia Reeves. M. Sarah KJelldln. f9. Loretta Grim. 70. Helen Burton. life lost its flavor and, led thereto by habit of mind and a natural melancholy inclination, he determined to destroy himself, having long con vinced his reason that such an act is justified and agreeable to philosophy. We will leave the unfortunate gentleman in that resolution to the other victims of the tragedy on Pelican estate. "In the case of John Diggle, the night watchman, no difficulty of character presents itself. He was a direct, single-minded man against whom nothing evil can be advanced a 'good husband and parent and a loyal and hon est servant. He carried on the tradition hand ed to him by his grandfather and father before him. and worked with one sole purpose, the welfare of his employers. Their relation to him was closer than that of master and man. They valued him for himself and in many ways revealed their personal regard and esteem. "This man's duty was to guard the suagr cane plantations by night, and we find in con nection with that "work an old but general un derstanding and unwritten law, that thieves stole at their personal peril. It was not uncommon in former days for these pilfering gentlemen to loso their lives, just as a poacher, or other nocturnal robber in England, .also has paid the extreme penalty. But human feeling naturally seta p.gainst such a strenuous course of action as principles of humanity gain ground. A hun dred years ago the man-trap and spring-gun were sllctioned; yet such barbaric engines are now by law swept into oblivion. So with this old pre-Plave proscription; and we may take it for granted that John Diggle would not have fired upon a thief under greater provocation than he was ever likely to receive from one. "In this connection, nevertheless, we find a cloud arise on the life of John Diggle come few days before his end. Too much importance can not be attached to this incident since upon it hangs the the whole theory about to be elabo rated. We must, therefore, dwell on the state ment made by Mrs. Diggle to my representa tive in Barbados and fully reported to him. If necessary, Mrs. Diggle can be further ques tioned, though in my . judgment she has al ready said all that need be said. "What does she say? "That, on a certain occasion, her husband came in sad to breakfast. He denies his trou ble at first; but upon his wife insisting that he is not himself, he curses the thieves and says that h has got to worry about them, becauuse Mr. Henry Slanning is worrying. Mr. Henry has told Diggle that he is falling short of his duty and forgetting how to treat the thieves. Then mark this Diggle says that henceforth there shall bo no doubt about obeying and that he will do what he is told to, 'to the end in fu ture, whatever happens.' "Immediately before the tragedy, therefore, John Diggle has been reproved for laxity in his work, and he accordingly, resolves that, come what may come of it, he will strictly obey his order to the letter. We shall find what those orders were in a. moment; and there can, I think, be little doubt that the commands issued to Diggle by Henry Slanning were of a nature that Diggle did not expect. They surprised him, and we can see how. In the first place, it was highly improbable that Slanning would bother his head about the petty pilferings of cane, or care a button concerning such a trifle; and in tho second, still more improbable that he should seek to put a stop to them by rever sion to obsolete drastic measures that he, of all men, would have been the first to censure. For so I read John Dlgglo's trouble coupled with his resolve. Ho is going to bey, regardless of consequences; he is going to do exactly as he is ' told, 'whatever happens.' He therefore appre hended that something might happen; but he was under orders and did not attempt to shirk them, though the orders had astonished and dis mayed him. "Leaving him also, on the threshold of the disaster, I turn to Solly Lawson and find again a character that presents no difficulties and can be very fairly appreciated from the information at ow disposal. This young half-caste is seen . as a youth of strong animal passions, uncon trolled and not malevolent. He was of little worth, sensual, lazy and quick-tempered; but ho had wit and a ready tongue and what alone matters his attitude to his master was one of steadfast and deserved devotion. Nor does the fact that Solly would not scruple to steal cane de tract from his affection for the gentlemen who had forgiven so many sins and still employed the poor fellow at the time of his death. Solly would steal Henry Slanning's cane today and die for him tomorrow. The doglike trust and affection displayed by many negroes and half-castes is a part of young Lawson's nature. He has ex pressed to bis mother a thousand times his re gard for both his masters, and I believe that in this assurance the young man was perfectly honest. "What does Mrs. Lawson'fay ? 'He dash at flngs so.' Solly is ill-governed, impetuous and laU'lilsiVSiFcc good, pr .evil, h 'dashes a( 71. Flovd Rpracktcs. 7K. rtorla MoElrov. 72. K. Kriss. 77. Lucille Buscher, 73. Cecilia Prazan. 7S. Lilly Downey. 74. Thelma Wells. 79. Mayme lecha. 75. O. Bea:.- . thing?.' And there is a still more remarkable statement recorded to the dead man's mother. Such is her son's affection for his employers that he would have died for them. Much follows from this admission; but we have to admit also that Solly had no grudge against John Diggle. Even in the event of Diggle getting him locked up, Solly would not have allowed enmity against the night watchman' to inspire him on regain ing his liberty. In his mind, to repeat his mother's forcible words, 'when a flng done, it done.' "Here, then, is the third party in this trini ty of the dead and his character stands clearly before vs. Had he been different; had Diggle been different; had Henry Slanning been differ ent, my reconstruction of those events that de stroyed all three, would not be feasible; but It is built upon the only foundation that remains for any superstructure the foundation of character; and, to my surprise, I find it ample for our purpose. I had suspected that any theo ry based on character alone, must have needed modification and some special pleading when it came to details; I had anticipated the need to rely upon probability and exercise no little In genuity in rounding the narrative and gathering the tangled thread into a complete skein; I had even feared "that character itself might presently confound me and make it impossible honestly to develop a consistent story; but, to my satis faction, I find this is not the case. Effect, In shape of facts, follows cause, as furnished by character, directly and lucidly; motive is at last revealed, like the sun breaking from behind a cloud, and the series of events follow upon each other logically, inexorably. These thing had to be and they could not have fallen out differently. "Henry Slanning is responsible for the en tire concatenation. He designed a certain action and took elaborate means to insure its opera tion; but, the event he planned duly accom plished, accident willed that it should serve aa a prelude to other events beyondhls calculations events fatal to the second and third actors in the drama. "Thus we arrive at the threshold of our mystery. "When the house sleeps, Henry Slanning rises and makes his way to the plantations, choosing that region where John Diggle will be perambulating, gun on shoulder. Slanning goes of set purpose o his death. He is willing to die, but not by his own hand. It is part of his character that, while he seeks death, he cannot inflict it upon himself.. He has, however, in tended to do so. He has taken first steps to ward that end, and the revolver, found by his dead body, was bought by him at Messrs. For rest, New Bond street. He wrote to England for it a week after his great disappointment, and he duly received it with a box of 100 cart ridges. But he could not use it. For a mo ment he had dreamed of so doing when he la bored under the bitterness of his rejection. It was. however, an aberration of character that drove him to send for the weapon, and long before it reached his hand, he had sufficiently returned to himself to make its use impossible. "Why, however, did he take it to the plan tation empty? To make sure of John Diggle. He went out in his pyjamas, a light alpaca jacket, and a? big straw hat, similar to those the negroes wear. Thus attired, iri such a place, at such a time, ho must naturally be mistaken for a common marauder; and having already di rected Diggle to do his duty in such an event an'l fire at sight unon any thief, ho expected him M do so. Hut the revolver was an inspiration, calculated to nerve Diggle and banish the least remaining trace of hesitation. Digglo would challenge, and if ho received no reply nnd.no surrender would fire. How much more cer tainly, then, might he be expected to fire and with how much 'sterner efficiency of aim, if the thief threatened him? "Two of these three men died in a clear ing of cane, where cutting was in progress an 4 the plant of fiio plare show a pathway extend ing through it to the cliffs beyond. To the clearing goes Henry Slanning and begins to cut dewn cane with one of tho little familiar hatchets used for the purpojy. He knows that in the silence of night, the noise must soon reach Diggle's ear; and it does so. The watch man thereupon hastens to the spot, and it hap pens that Solly Lawson, homeward bound by the short cut through the cane, arrives a few moments afterwards. "Wo may describe what follows with, the . eyes of Solly Lawson. "He sees Digglo challenge and marks a man jump up before him. With head down the rob- , ber approaches, and for answer to Diggle's de mind to surrender, produces a revolver and points it at tho watchman. The Rteel flashes in the mocnllght and Diggle's response is to get in hU shot first if he can. He fires and the tin know falls. Solly sees Diggle drop his gun and run forward ;ut he sees no more. Henur " ' Hutu to Jt ittt Mug iicj.